What is my Gateway?












0















My wireless router has these items when I set it up, but I don't know the Gateway number.




  • IP Address 192.168.1.100

  • Subnet Mask 255.255.255.0

  • DNS Server 192.168.1.1

  • Secondary DNS Server 0.0.0.0


It sometimes says "Invalid gateway address. Gateway address must be on the same subnet with the network and the host number cannot be all 0 or all 1 binary values."



In this case what is the Gateway?










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  • 1





    Are you configuring the router itself, or a computer that'll be connected to the router?

    – grawity
    Feb 27 at 16:47











  • The router gateway is the IP address of the upstream gateway (router) belonging to your ISP. Your ISP should provide that address automatically when your internet is running.

    – DavidPostill
    Feb 27 at 18:18











  • Your question was difficult to understand so I added formatting and corrected some wording. Please check that my edits are valid.

    – Attie
    Feb 27 at 19:15











  • Where are you getting this information from? I mean, how are you seeing this? In your netork settings, a website, an app, ipconfig? The information you are showing for IP address and DNS server don't make sense for your router's settings.

    – RWW
    Feb 27 at 19:41
















0















My wireless router has these items when I set it up, but I don't know the Gateway number.




  • IP Address 192.168.1.100

  • Subnet Mask 255.255.255.0

  • DNS Server 192.168.1.1

  • Secondary DNS Server 0.0.0.0


It sometimes says "Invalid gateway address. Gateway address must be on the same subnet with the network and the host number cannot be all 0 or all 1 binary values."



In this case what is the Gateway?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Are you configuring the router itself, or a computer that'll be connected to the router?

    – grawity
    Feb 27 at 16:47











  • The router gateway is the IP address of the upstream gateway (router) belonging to your ISP. Your ISP should provide that address automatically when your internet is running.

    – DavidPostill
    Feb 27 at 18:18











  • Your question was difficult to understand so I added formatting and corrected some wording. Please check that my edits are valid.

    – Attie
    Feb 27 at 19:15











  • Where are you getting this information from? I mean, how are you seeing this? In your netork settings, a website, an app, ipconfig? The information you are showing for IP address and DNS server don't make sense for your router's settings.

    – RWW
    Feb 27 at 19:41














0












0








0








My wireless router has these items when I set it up, but I don't know the Gateway number.




  • IP Address 192.168.1.100

  • Subnet Mask 255.255.255.0

  • DNS Server 192.168.1.1

  • Secondary DNS Server 0.0.0.0


It sometimes says "Invalid gateway address. Gateway address must be on the same subnet with the network and the host number cannot be all 0 or all 1 binary values."



In this case what is the Gateway?










share|improve this question
















My wireless router has these items when I set it up, but I don't know the Gateway number.




  • IP Address 192.168.1.100

  • Subnet Mask 255.255.255.0

  • DNS Server 192.168.1.1

  • Secondary DNS Server 0.0.0.0


It sometimes says "Invalid gateway address. Gateway address must be on the same subnet with the network and the host number cannot be all 0 or all 1 binary values."



In this case what is the Gateway?







router ipv4 gateway






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Feb 27 at 19:13









Attie

12.2k33246




12.2k33246










asked Feb 27 at 16:35









Dauvïc DaudoDauvïc Daudo

1




1








  • 1





    Are you configuring the router itself, or a computer that'll be connected to the router?

    – grawity
    Feb 27 at 16:47











  • The router gateway is the IP address of the upstream gateway (router) belonging to your ISP. Your ISP should provide that address automatically when your internet is running.

    – DavidPostill
    Feb 27 at 18:18











  • Your question was difficult to understand so I added formatting and corrected some wording. Please check that my edits are valid.

    – Attie
    Feb 27 at 19:15











  • Where are you getting this information from? I mean, how are you seeing this? In your netork settings, a website, an app, ipconfig? The information you are showing for IP address and DNS server don't make sense for your router's settings.

    – RWW
    Feb 27 at 19:41














  • 1





    Are you configuring the router itself, or a computer that'll be connected to the router?

    – grawity
    Feb 27 at 16:47











  • The router gateway is the IP address of the upstream gateway (router) belonging to your ISP. Your ISP should provide that address automatically when your internet is running.

    – DavidPostill
    Feb 27 at 18:18











  • Your question was difficult to understand so I added formatting and corrected some wording. Please check that my edits are valid.

    – Attie
    Feb 27 at 19:15











  • Where are you getting this information from? I mean, how are you seeing this? In your netork settings, a website, an app, ipconfig? The information you are showing for IP address and DNS server don't make sense for your router's settings.

    – RWW
    Feb 27 at 19:41








1




1





Are you configuring the router itself, or a computer that'll be connected to the router?

– grawity
Feb 27 at 16:47





Are you configuring the router itself, or a computer that'll be connected to the router?

– grawity
Feb 27 at 16:47













The router gateway is the IP address of the upstream gateway (router) belonging to your ISP. Your ISP should provide that address automatically when your internet is running.

– DavidPostill
Feb 27 at 18:18





The router gateway is the IP address of the upstream gateway (router) belonging to your ISP. Your ISP should provide that address automatically when your internet is running.

– DavidPostill
Feb 27 at 18:18













Your question was difficult to understand so I added formatting and corrected some wording. Please check that my edits are valid.

– Attie
Feb 27 at 19:15





Your question was difficult to understand so I added formatting and corrected some wording. Please check that my edits are valid.

– Attie
Feb 27 at 19:15













Where are you getting this information from? I mean, how are you seeing this? In your netork settings, a website, an app, ipconfig? The information you are showing for IP address and DNS server don't make sense for your router's settings.

– RWW
Feb 27 at 19:41





Where are you getting this information from? I mean, how are you seeing this? In your netork settings, a website, an app, ipconfig? The information you are showing for IP address and DNS server don't make sense for your router's settings.

– RWW
Feb 27 at 19:41










2 Answers
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It's not 100% clear what you are trying to do, but based on what I am guessing you are asking, you should be using a gateway address of 192.168.1.1, with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0.



Don't hold me to that, as I am filling in a lot of blanks here. :)






share|improve this answer































    0















    ipconfig /all




    Write it to cmd and you can find your all network details.






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      0














      It's not 100% clear what you are trying to do, but based on what I am guessing you are asking, you should be using a gateway address of 192.168.1.1, with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0.



      Don't hold me to that, as I am filling in a lot of blanks here. :)






      share|improve this answer




























        0














        It's not 100% clear what you are trying to do, but based on what I am guessing you are asking, you should be using a gateway address of 192.168.1.1, with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0.



        Don't hold me to that, as I am filling in a lot of blanks here. :)






        share|improve this answer


























          0












          0








          0







          It's not 100% clear what you are trying to do, but based on what I am guessing you are asking, you should be using a gateway address of 192.168.1.1, with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0.



          Don't hold me to that, as I am filling in a lot of blanks here. :)






          share|improve this answer













          It's not 100% clear what you are trying to do, but based on what I am guessing you are asking, you should be using a gateway address of 192.168.1.1, with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0.



          Don't hold me to that, as I am filling in a lot of blanks here. :)







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Feb 27 at 19:05









          PascalliPascalli

          1




          1

























              0















              ipconfig /all




              Write it to cmd and you can find your all network details.






              share|improve this answer




























                0















                ipconfig /all




                Write it to cmd and you can find your all network details.






                share|improve this answer


























                  0












                  0








                  0








                  ipconfig /all




                  Write it to cmd and you can find your all network details.






                  share|improve this answer














                  ipconfig /all




                  Write it to cmd and you can find your all network details.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Feb 27 at 19:08









                  mdelikanmdelikan

                  211




                  211






























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